
didn't know that one was in the game
jesus mita is real yo

jesus mita is real yo
I've had this monitor since March of this same year, although i've had no issues with it, i've always noticed something weird in the AmbiGlow, since i couldn't quite point my finger at whatever i was noticing, i just ignored it, mostly because i never had a monitor with AmbiGlow before so maybe it was a thing of getting used to.
But today i was editing a photo in Photoshop and saw it pretty clearly, so i made these 4 images to test if my theory was correct, and yes it is.
For some reason the bottom left row of lights map to the top right row of lights. I don't know why this is and would appreciate if someone could tell me how to fix this.
Thanks for listening.
Explanation of the images:
The squares are full 255 red.
1st-2nd images: The square is on the bottom right of the screen, and the lights at that zone light up properly.
3rd-4th images: Square on top left, lights at the zone light up properly.
5th-7th images: Square on top right, lights at top right zone light up, as expected, but the lights at the bottom left zone also light up for some reason (marked in blue).
8th-9th images: Square on bottom left, no lights are activated at all (marked in blue).
Monitor is at its latest firmware update checked using the Evnia Precision Center.
I'm currently following a free course i found on Youtube, more concretely, John Knowles "Into Animation" course.
I've learnt how to make a bouncing tennis ball, but for the 4th lesson i have to make a bouncing bowling ball, all on my own, research myself how bowling balls bounce and make it from scratch myself using what i've learnt and a provided rig.
This is how it turned out, and if you're curious, yes, i spent more time setting up the scenery, lighting and everything than actually animating the ball, but no one would want to click on a flat gray background so that's why i did it, to catch YOUR attention :)
Feedback very much appreciated as i want to actually turn this into a skill i can later use especially for game development and maybe short individual films.